Mark wrote:
I finally got around to reading your
book, Hard Time! Wow, once I started I could not put it down! I was usually "you do
the crime you do the time" in my opinions, but I could not believe the
vile conditions you had to endure, and I could not literally believe that you
spent all of that time in there on "remand", without trial being
treated that way. I was astonished at the corruption and the way that the
system is stacked against EVERY inmate, irrespective of circumstance. Whilst I
believe in punishment for the crimes, these conditions are totally unacceptable
in any circumstance. I also believe that somehow the corruption needs to be
stamped out, and as such I applaud your work in trying to get the message out
there to get this cause noticed and on someone's agenda to try and get some
action done! I notice today yahoo is running your story, which is great!
The book is great, but I suspect you
wish you didn't have to write it - you have succeeded in opening my eyes to the
alternate view for sure
A question: A lot of people relate
criminal activity back to treatment during childhood. Can I ask, did you
receive any discipline as a child? Were you, for example recipient of any forms
of corporal punishment both at school or at home? Do you think you were allowed
to go "off the rails" through a lack of discipline both at school and
at home as a child? Or were you studious and well behaved (having a degree and
all) as a child?
If I misbehaved as a child, I wouldn’t
be allowed out to play with my friends. I only got caned a couple of times at
school - one was for throwing a snowball that hit a teacher. I don’t believe I was allowed to go off the rails. I was studious, and
didn’t really go off the rails until I was making big money in America in my
twenties. I tried drugs thinking I could have fun at first and quit whenever I
wanted, but over time drugs put a cloud in my mind. Chasing my earlier highs, I
did more drugs and mixed drugs up, and my behaviour became much crazier. With
most of my friends doing the same, we reinforced each other’s negative
behaviour. With no one to put the brakes on, and our decision-making faculties
scrambled by years of drug use, we all went off the rails at the same time – as
you’ll find out in much more detail if you read my next book, Party Time.
Regarding your comment about the jail
conditions, you quite rightly pointed out that unsentenced inmates shouldn’t have
to endure such conditions. In America, there is a presumption of innocence
until guilt is found, and the law states that pretrial detention shouldn’t be a
form of punishment. The conditions are illegal, but Sheriff Joe gets away with
it because he’s elected by people in Arizona, where he is a law unto himself, out doing publicity stunts every week, while raking in millions in political contributions from vested interests such as the private prisons.
Shaun Attwood
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